Debbie Gill-Fox: "This image was taken just
south of Christchurch, New Zealand, at around local midnight
(1100UTC) on 29-11-00, using f3.5, 30 second exposure, on 800
ASA Fuji film. The bright stars at the left of the image are
the Southern Cross."

John Russell: "Last night (12:00 to 01:30
am local time on the 28th of Nov) I saw the most fantastic aurora
I've ever seen. I couldn't see ANY stars through the glare. Beautiful
displays lasted several hours into the morning. During these
shots I could read the LCD on my camera; it lit the landscape
up brighter than a full moon." Typical photo settings: Nikon
N90s camera; 35mm Nikkor F2.0 lens; 6 second exposures on Fuji
NHG II Pro800 film.

Wade Clark: "This display between 12 midnight
and 12:45am PST on Nov. 28th was almost totally colorless while
viewing (except for a bit of green near the horizon). Obviously
the film picks up the colors much better than the eye. Not a
spectacular display, but beautiful nonetheless." Photo settings:
Fuji NHG II 800 speed color negative film, exposures reange from
25 to 40 seconds.

Noreen Harding: "I live south of Aberdeen
in Scotland, and travelled about 4 miles inland to be free of
my village lights and the light pollution from Aberdeen. In reality
the aurora seemed faint, although we did catch a red streak at
one point, and I am amazed at the colour on these images. Exposure
was between 30 and 50 seconds at 3.5 aperture on 400 speed film."

Yusuke Ebihara: "The picture was taken at
approx. 2000 UT on Nov. 26, 2000, when the horizontal component
of the ground magnetic field showed a negative excursion, that
is, a large substorm. Prior to this, I saw an extremely intense
red aurorae between 1830 and 1930 UT." Photo settings: Film:
Kodak Royal Gold 400; Camera: Nikon New FM-2; Lens Nikkor 24mm
f2.0.

Ryan Kramer: "These pics were taken from
Grand Forks, ND, on the morning of 11-26 during the early morning
(1:00 AM to 3:00 AM) I didn't expect aurora, so my camera was
mounted on a telescope at the time (hence the slightly skewed
view) and I couldn't take the time to set it up on it's own tripod."